it could also be a cfd. it could be a public/private agreement. could be a community but of the district that steps up and says it would maintain the streetscape. there are many ways to do that, but the point is we would not spend the money until we have identified each project, how maintenance would be taken care of. those are the five threshold criteria. in addition, the next slide, as i highlighted, the new criteria that came out of literally our meeting with the capital planning committee just an hour ago -- a question was raised, and it is a good question -- where does this implement bill? remember an ifd has never been done in the state of california. we would be the first city to implement one, which is exciting, but it also means we have to figure out some of the rules. it is not an independent entity. it does not have its own board. the board of supervisors manages it. that is an important point. we have a choice as to how we allocate the increment. one is to flow into a special fund managed by the board. the other was to have it flow by